After a contentious election, another political battle is brewing in Washington, this one with potentially serious consequences for the US economy. Both sides staked out their positions Friday on what to do about the so-called "fiscal cliff" - a combination of tax hikes and spending cuts that would automatically take place at the end of the year. Economists warn failure by US lawmakers could send the economy into another tailspin.
Fresh from his election victory, President Barack Obama sounded conciliatory Friday - inviting congressional and business leaders to the White House next week to begin discussions on a deficit reduction plan. The president said he is open to all ideas, but pushed back against any plan that relies solely on spending cuts to reduce the nation's debt.
"We can't just cut our way to prosperity. If we're serious about reducing the deficit, we have to combine spending cuts with revenue, and that means asking the wealthiest Americans to pay a little more in taxes," said Obama.
Republicans say tax hikes on the wealthy would result in massive job losses.
Speaking an hour before the president, House Speaker John Boehner said he would support some revenue increases as part of overall tax reforms. But the Republican congressional leader wants to extend the deadline for negotiations to work out differences.
"2013 should be the year we begin to solve our debt through tax reform and entitlement reform, and I'm proposing we avert the fiscal cliff together in a manner that insures that 2013 is the year that our government finally comes to grips with the major problems that are facing us," said Boehner.
Automatic tax increases and drastic cuts to defense and domestic spending kick in January 1, 2013 unless Congress is able to craft a plan to reduce the nation's nearly $16-trillion debt.
After campaigning for months on allowing tax cuts to expire only for wealthy Americans, Obama said the time for "drama and negotiations" is over.
"Nobody, not Republicans, not Democrats want taxes to go up for folks making under $250,000 a year. So let's not wait. Even as we're negotiating a broader deficit reduction package, let's extend the middle class tax cuts right now, let's do that right now," said the president.
Uncertainty over the US fiscal crisis has roiled financial markets for weeks. The Congressional Budget Office says the combination of higher taxes and reduced spending could cut the deficit in half. But it would also push the world's largest economy into a recession, cost millions of jobs and threaten economic growth in other countries.
新概念英语第四册英音版 20-Snake Poison
新概念英语第四册英音版 10-Silicon Valley
新概念英语第三册英音版 59-Collecting
新概念英语第四册英音版 17-A Man-made Disease
新概念英语第四册英音版 32-Galileo Reborn
新概念英语第四册英音版 34-Adolescence
新概念英语第四册英音版 15-Secrecy in Industry
新概念英语第四册英音版 21-William S. Hart and the Early Western Film
新概念英语第四册英音版 06-The Sporting Spirit
新概念英语第三册英音版 56-Our Neighbour, the River
新概念英语第四册英音版 19-The Stuff of Dreams
新概念英语第三册英音版 50-New Year Resolutions
新概念英语第三册英音版 53-In the Public Interest
新概念英语第四册英音版 28-Patients and Doctors
新概念英语第四册英音版 13-The Search for Oil
新概念英语第三册英音版 60-Too Early and Too Late
新概念英语第四册英音版 26-The Past Life of the Earth
新概念英语第四册英音版 11-How to Grow Old
新概念英语第四册英音版 08-Trading Standards
新概念英语第四册英音版 30-Exploring the Sea-Floor
新概念英语第三册英音版 58-A spot of bother
新概念英语第三册英音版 51-Predicting the Future
新概念英语第四册英音版 23-Bird Flight
新概念英语第四册英音版 22-Knowledge and Progress
新概念英语第三册英音版 52-Mud is Mud
新概念英语第四册英音版 29-The Hovercraft
新概念英语第四册英音版 03-Matterhorn Man
新概念英语第四册英音版 35-Space Odyssey
新概念英语第四册英音版 36-The Cost of Government
新概念英语第四册英音版 33-Education